Colonial Beach Humane Society
This organization was founded to support spay/neuter of feral cats in Colonial Beach.
Hey Crazy Cat Ladies and Gents of the Moose!
Not a member? Ask Dr. Caryn about joining!
Today,Monday June 8th the Colonial Beach Moose Lodge opens at 3pm. Dinner Special is Cheeseburger and chips for 5 or Cheeseburger and FF for 7. Don't forget about our drink specials. Kitchen is open until 8pm. So beat the heat and come have a treat at the lodge. Lodge closes at 9.
26/05/2026
Join us next week for our yard sale to benefit the Colonial Beach Humane Society. If you have items to donate, please contact Lisa at 240-274-3886 of place them on the porch at 219 Sulgrave.
24/05/2026
The Trump administration has NOT banned trained service dogs from government or public housing.
However, there is a major policy change regarding emotional support animals (ESAs), which is likely where the confusion stems from. HOWEVER - See Virginia’s Protection at end of this post!
The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) issued a new policy directive that fundamentally changes how assistance animals are treated in housing:
1. Trained Service Dogs Remain Fully Protected
If you have a trained service dog (such as a guide dog for the blind, a signal dog for the deaf, or a dog trained to perform specific tasks for psychiatric or physical conditions), nothing has changed. Under the Fair Housing Act, landlords and government housing authorities are still legally required to grant reasonable accommodations. You cannot be banned or charged pet fees for a trained service dog.
2. Emotional Support Animals (ESAs) Lose Blanket Protections
The major change targets untrained emotional support animals. The New Rules: HUD instructed its fair housing office that requests to waive "no-pets" policies for untrained emotional support animals are no longer "presumptively reasonable."
The Reason: HUD cited the rise of an online industry that allows pet owners to easily buy fraudulent certificates to bypass landlord pet rules and fees.
The Impact: Landlords and public housing authorities now have federal backing to deny or more strictly police requests for emotional support animals, whereas previously, ESAs were treated with the same broad legal protections as fully trained service dogs.
VIRGINIA
Under Virginia Fair Housing Law, landlords cannot blanket-ban emotional support animals, but Virginia has strict rules to prevent people from cheating the system. The state legally protects legitimate ESAs while weeding out the fake online registries by enforcing the following guidelines:
1. "Certificates" Mean Nothing
In Virginia, buying a badge, vest, or registration certificate from a random website carries zero legal weight. Landlords are completely within their rights to ignore them.
2. A Real "Therapeutic Relationship" is Required
To legally have an ESA in Virginia, you must provide a valid ESA letter from a licensed healthcare professional (like a doctor, psychiatrist, or licensed therapist). Crucially, Virginia law states the provider should have a genuine therapeutic relationship with you.
3. What the Landlord Can and Cannot Do
If you provide a legitimate letter from your treating physician/therapist:
The landlord must waive "no-pets" policies and breed/weight restrictions.
The landlord cannot charge you pet deposits, pet rent, or application fees for the ESA.
However, the landlord can deny the animal if it poses a documented direct threat to the safety of others or causes severe structural damage to the property.
Virginia essentially aligned its state laws perfectly with the federal HUD guidance: protecting people who genuinely need an emotional support animal as part of their medical treatment, while shutting the door on sketchy online certificate mills.